Monday, May 06, 2013

UPDATE: Second series of Endeavour confirmed!

UPDATE - June 5th, 2013: ITV announced today that it has recommissioned Endeavour for a second series. This will feature four more stories written by Russell Lewis, all starring the regular cast. Camille Gatin takes over from Dan McCulloch as producer, while Michele Buck, Damien Timmer and Rebecca Eaton continue as execs.

"We're truly delighted by the audience's reaction to the first quartet of Endeavour stories," Lewis says in the official press release, "and very grateful to ITV for the opportunity to further embellish the legend. As to where we'll be going next time out? 1966. the year of Revolver. In the Bodleian. With Miss Scarlet. 'They think it's all over...?' It's only just started, matey!"

ITV Director of Drama Commissioning Steve November adds: "The audience response to the classic crime partnership of Endeavour and Thursday has been incredible and we're thrilled at the prospect of more Endeavour stories..."

This announcement comes as no surprise, following the ratings and reviews garnered by the first full series of Endeavour. The show averaged seven million viewers and plentiful appreciation from the critics. I suspect Endeavour would have gotten a lot more attention, but for the unexpected smash hit success of Broadchurch on ITV.

ORIGINAL POST:

The first series of Endeavour concluded last night with an episode displaying the same care, cunning and craftmanship as the three that preceded it. I won't spoil the plotfor those who haven't seen it, but you're in for a treat. All four stories in this first series - Girl, Fugue, Rocket and Home - more than fulfilled the promise of last year's Pilot.

Devising a prequel to beloved TV series Inspector Morse [and Colin Dexter's original novels, of course] could easily have gone wrong. In less skilled hands this visit to Morse's past could have turned into graverobbing. Happily, the talents of those involved made a drama that stood shoulder to shoulder with Morse's best moments.

Endeavour benefits from the same stunning production values as Morse and its successor Lewis, a rarity in much of today's austerity-ridden TV. The show looks amazing, with wonderful period detail illuminating the unmistakable melancholy that seems to typify Morse. Yet this series is not merely an act of imitation or ventriloquism.
Having written a lot about Morse, I enjoyed its spin-off series Lewis - but at times it felt like just another police procedural. Much as it evoked memories of Morse, the character's absence was a gaping hole the show never overcame. The best episodes sought their own identity, but whatafflicted Lewis most of all was inconsistency.
The makers of Endeavour avoided that by employing one writer - Russell Lewis - to script all five episodes to date. The result is a thematic architecture underpinning the whole series, that rare sense of a single storyteller drawing you in a world and revealing its richness - a quality TV drama executives insist on calling 'authored' [shudder].

In reality, dozens of people contribute to any series. But the best TV drama starts with scripts and Endeavour has been well served. For me, the most enthralling aspect has been the characterisation. Revelations about who killed whom and why are merely the engine for the real drama - the making and moulding of Morse himself.
Period setting suits this kind of mystery. Mobile phones, the internet and advances in forensic science have turned instinct-led detectives like Morse into dinosaurs. By positioning Endeavour well before DNA profiling, the show's makers put wit and intelligence back at the centre of mystery drama. Goodbye lab coats, hello grey matter.
It is the surest of sure things that ITV will commission a second series of Endeavour. Were I a gambler, I would bet the decision has already been made but the announcement held back. In the meantime I will enjoy rewatching the first series on DVD, due out today [why no Blu-Ray?]. Hurry back, Endeavour...Update: still no official word on a second series, though I'd be amazed if there wasn't one. In the meantime, it's worth noting the ukulele-strumming singer Rachael D'Arcy who featured in the final series one story Home has released her Endeavour songs Dance For You and The Entertainer via iTunes in the UK and US. Enjoy!